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Nature of Waves

Nature of Waves. Characteristics. a traveling disturbance that carries energy through matter or space matter moves horizontally or vertically just a little, while the wave energy moves horizontally a lot. most get their energy by a vibration

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Nature of Waves

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  1. Nature of Waves

  2. Characteristics • a traveling disturbance that carries energy through matter or space • matter moves horizontally or vertically just a little, while the wave energy moves horizontally a lot. • most get their energy by a vibration • a movement that follows the same path repeatedly • causes one particle to move, then another, and so on……

  3. Parts of a wave

  4. Crest • highest point of the wave • Trough • the lowest point of the wave • Amplitude • how high or low the wave is • measure from the x-axis (resting position) to the crest or trough • as amplitude increase, so does the energy of the wave

  5. Wavelength • the distance between two consecutive crests or troughs • symbol is Greek letter lambda, λ

  6. Frequency • the number of complete waves per unit of time (normally seconds) • count how many troughs or crests go by in one second • unit of measurement is Hertz (Hz) • different frequencies can produce different sounds or color Wave frequency website

  7. Types of Waves • Waves can be classified by of what they are in (called the medium) • Waves that require a medium are mechanical waves and those that don’t are electromagnetic waves • Transverse Waves • the motion of the medium is perpendicular (right angles) to the direction the wave is moving • “stuff in the wave moves up and down, while the wave moves left or right” • examples are electromagnetic (light, x-rays, heat…), water, and earthquake waves

  8. Longitudinal Waves • the motion of the medium is parallel to the direction the wave is moving • “both the energy of the wave and the atoms are moving the same direction” • also called compression waves because the medium is compressed (pushed together) • the compressed area with more particles is called the compression • the spread out area where there are fewer particles is called the rarefaction

  9. Surface Waves • a combination of longitudinal and transverse waves • occurs in between two mediums like water and air • the particles in the wave move in a circular path

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